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Decent work

1.
Decent Work in the Era of Sustainable
Development
Finn Tarp, Director of UNU-WIDER

2.
Questions asked
• Considering Finland’s engagements related to the SDGs and decent
work:
– How will the international community monitor progress?
– How will monitoring results help Finland and other countries with
implementation?
• What are the biggest challenges of the SDGs? What kind of fears do
different actors have regarding to the implementation?
• What kind of expectations do you have regarding SDGs?
• What kind of action is needed now by different actors? How will the
SDGs be achieved?

4.
Key bodies
• The key coordinating body is the Inter-agency and Expert Group on SDG Indicators
(IAEG-SDGs), created by the UN Statistical Commission in March 2015: tasked with
creating a proposal for a global indicator framework, agreed in March 2016
• Global monitoring should be based, to the greatest possible extent, on comparable
and standardized national data, obtained through well-established reporting
mechanisms from countries to the international statistical system
• The Statistics Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs of the
Secretariat the secretariat of the Expert Group

6.
Goal 8 and a critical note
• Goal 8 on promoting sustained, inclusive and
sustainable economic growth, full and productive
employment and decent work for all
• Data availability not considered during goal and
target selection

7.
Universality
• SDGs are meant to be global goals with relevance to both developed
and developing countries; but major variation in how they apply
across countries
• Obvious with respect to country targets regarding ‘levels’ (e.g., what
makes sense for Finland in terms of goals for average hourly earnings
will be different to what makes sense for the same in Tanzania)
• There is also very considerable variation regarding monitoring: the
data available in a country like Finland is much better and finer
grained than that generally available in poorer countries

9.
Based on level of methodological
development and overall data availability
• A first tier for which an established methodology exists
and data are already widely available (tier I)
• A second tier for which a methodology has been
established but for which data are not easily available
(tier II)
• A third tier for which an internationally agreed
methodology has not yet been developed (tier III)

14.
Selected quotes/issues
• Sustainable Development Goal indicators should be disaggregated, where
relevant, by income, sex, age, race, ethnicity, migratory status, disability and
geographic location, or other characteristics
• Member States also recognized that the basic principle of the 2030 Agenda —
that no one is to be left behind —will require a significant level of data
disaggregation and stressed that:
– “quality, accessible, timely and reliable disaggregated data will be needed to help with
the measurement of progress and to ensure that no one is left behind”
• National statistical offices are to play the leading role in the development of
the indicator framework to ensure national ownership

15.
Data by gender are especially poor
• When data is collected at individual level, disaggregation by gender is
possible.
• However, data are often collected only at household level. In such
cases, gender specificity is not always straightforward. For example:
• Asset or land ownership
• Consumption
• Individual-level poverty

16.
Filling gaps can be (deceptively) difficult
for technical reasons
Some instances where targets appear simple, but measurement of indicators is difficult:
• Violent injuries and deaths per 100,000 population: official crimes data usually under-
reported
• Percentage of women of reproductive age (15-49) with anaemia
• Proportion of persons with severe mental disorder who are using services
• Percentage of girls and boys who achieve proficiency across a broad range of ‘learning
outcomes’
• Percentage of children (36-59 months) receiving at least one year of ’quality’ pre-
primary education programme

17.
Filling gaps can also be difficult for political
reasons – a point often overlooked
Example:
• 10.2: ‘by 2030 empower and
promote the social,
economic and political
inclusion of all irrespective
of age, sex, disability, race,
ethnicity, origin, religion or
economic or other status’
• To collect data on indigenous peoples,
they need to be recognized as such.
• ILO 169 – Indigenous and Tribal Peoples
Convention (1989) – is ratified by 22
countries:

18.
So
• While there is quite a bit of discussion on data gaps in
various forums, official provisions for how to deal
concretely with such gaps are not clear - at least
based on the latest IAEG-SDG report.

20.
Goal 8: 17 indicators agreed
• Annual growth rate of real GDP per capita and per employed person
• Share of informal employment in non-agriculture employment, by sex
• Material footprint, per capita and per GDP (+ domestic numbers)
• Average hourly earnings of female and male employees, by occupation, age group and persons with disabilities
• Unemployment rate, by sex, age group and persons with disabilities
• Percentage of youth (aged 15-24) not in education, employment or training
• Percentage and number of children aged 5-17 engaged in child labour, by sex and age group
• Frequency rates of fatal and non-fatal occupational injuries, by sex and migrant status
• Increase in national compliance of labour rights
• Tourism direct GDP (as a percentage of total GDP and in growth rate); and number of jobs in tourism industries
(as a percentage of total jobs and growth rate of jobs, by sex)
• Number of commercial bank branches and automated teller machines (ATMs) per 100,000 adults
• Percentage of adults (15 years and older) with an account at a bank or other financial institution or with a
mobile money service provider
• Aid for Trade commitments and disbursements
• Total government spending in social protection and employment programmes as a percentage of the national
budgets and GDP

26.
A strategy for industrial development
• Africa can break into the global market for industrial
goods
– Changes in Asia; trade in tasks; industries without
smokestacks
• “Doing Business” not enough
• Infrastructure development, skills upgrading, and a
major export push essential

27.
Africa’s population set to double to 2.5
billion by 2050: bigger than both
China and India and Nigeria > US
– labour intensive investments and
note where does decent employment
come from

28.
Light up and power Africa
Energyuseperperson
Income per person
South Africa
Mozambique
Denmark
Other countries

30.
To discuss
– Are there some indicators that are key and for which we generally have
reasonable data for most countries?
• The international community could use these to do a ‘barebones’ monitoring of
progress – recognizing the limitations of the data.
– Which indicators are ‘essential’?
• How much should be invested in improving data on these indicators? What should
the balance be between investing in better data for monitoring Goal 8 versus
investing directly in programmes to improve decent work etc.?
– When do we say e.g., that qualitative assessments or guesstimates are
sufficient for our purposes in the absence of good national statistics?
– How should the answers to the above questions influence Finland’s
development policy and programming overseas?